| Literature DB >> 32282819 |
Serene Thain1, George S H Yeo1, Kenneth Kwek2, Bernard Chern3, Kok Hian Tan1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Preterm birth (birth before 37 weeks of completed gestation) is the leading cause of neonatal death, and has an incidence of 5-13% which is believed to be on the rise. The objective of this study was to determine the rate of spontaneous preterm birth and investigate the relationship between preterm birth and cervical length in a pregnant Asian population.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32282819 PMCID: PMC7153874 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0230125
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flowchart showing the NORA study recruitment process.
Demographics, clinical characteristics and pregnancy outcomes of study population.
| Characteristics | Incidence (total n = 926) N, % |
|---|---|
| ≤ 20 | 21 (2.27%) |
| 21–25 | 119 (12.85%) |
| 26–30 | 336 (36.29%) |
| 31–35 | 289 (31.21%) |
| 36–40 | 140 (15.11%) |
| 41–45 | 21 (2.27%) |
| Chinese | 470 (50.75%) |
| Malay | 250 (27.00%) |
| Indian | 100 (10.80%) |
| Others | 106 (11.45%) |
| <18.5 | 62 (6.70%) |
| 18.5 to 24.9 | 523 (56.48%) |
| 25 to 29.9 | 230 (24.84%) |
| ≥30 | 106 (11.45%) |
| Unknown | 5 (0.54%) |
| Primary | 12 (1.3%) |
| Secondary | 209 (22.57%) |
| ITE | 99 (10.69%) |
| JC/Polytechnic | 268 (28.94%) |
| University | 335 (36.18%) |
| Unknown | 3 (0.32%) |
| Married | 871 (94.06%) |
| Single | 52 (5.62%) |
| Divorced/Widowed | 3 (0.32%) |
| Employed | 740 (79.91%) |
| Housewife | 176 (19.01%) |
| Student Unemployed | 7 (0.76%) 3 (0.32%) |
| Primip | 389 (42.01%) |
| Multip | 537 (57.99%) |
| 0 | 501 (54.10%) |
| 1 | 295 (31.86%) |
| 2 | 92 (9.94%) |
| 3 | 30 (3.24%) |
| 4 | 5 (0.54%) |
| 5 | 3 (0.32%) |
| Non-smoker | 902 (97.40%) |
| Smoker | 24 (2.60%) |
| Drinker | 915 (98.80%) |
| Non-drinker | 11 (1.20%) |
| 39 (4.2%) | |
| < 28 weeks (extreme preterm) | 2 (5.1%) |
| 28-<32 weeks (very preterm) | 1 (2.6%) |
| 32-<35 weeks (moderate preterm) | 7 (17.9%) |
| 35–37 weeks (late preterm) | 29 (74.4%) |
| 23 (2.5%) | |
| 864 (93.3%) | |
Median cervical length over gestation.
| Median cervical length (cm) (n = 911) | |
|---|---|
| 3.10 (± 0.63) | |
| 3.19 (± 0.75) | |
| 3.07 (± 0.73) | |
| 2.73 (± 0.82) |
Ɨ only includes patients whose gestation at Visit 4 is ≤36 weeks
Fig 2Median cervical length over gestation.
Relationship between ethnicity and median cervical length.
| Chinese (n = 462) | Malay (n = 246) | Indian (n = 99) | Others (n = 104) | p-value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3.13 (± 0.65) | 3.03 (± 0.61) | 2.99 (± 0.67) | 3.21 (± 0.58) | 0.118 | |
| 3.22 (± 0.77) | 3.13 (± 0.69) | 2.97 (± 0.70) | 3.33 (± 0.82) | ||
| 3.11 (± 0.74) | 2.95 (± 0.71) | 2.94(± 0.62) | 3.13 (± 0.79) | ||
| 2.75 (± 0.82) | 2.67(± 0.81) | 2.59 (± 0.85) | 2.68 (± 0.86) | 0.783 |
Ɨ only includes patients whose gestation at Visit 4 is ≤36 weeks
*significant at p<0.05, Mann Whitney test
ns = not significant
Relationship between median cervical length and history of previous preterm birth.
| Previous Preterm (n = 33) | No Previous Preterm (n = 878) | p-value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3.01 (± 0.66) | 3.10 (± 0.63) | 0.835 | |
| 2.92 (± 0.89) | 3.20 (± 0.75) | 0.050 | |
| 2.76 (± 0.85) | 3.08 (± 0.72) | 0.060 | |
| 2.66 (± 0.81) | 2.73 (± 0.82) | 0.565 |
Ɨ only includes patients whose gestation at Visit 4 is ≤36 weeks
*significant at p<0.05, Mann Whitney test
ns = not significant
Comparison between median cervical length in spontaneous preterm birth versus term birth group.
| Median cervical length (cm) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Spontaneous PTB | Term birth | p-value | |
| 3.05 (±0.50) | 3.10 (±0.64) | .425 | |
| 3.03 (±1.34) | 3.20 (±0.71) | .028 | |
| 2.43 (±0.88) | 3.10 (±0.71) | < .001 | |
| 2.21 (±0.73) | 2.74 (±0.82) | .072 | |
Ɨ only includes patients whose gestation at Visit 4 is ≤36 weeks
*significant at p<0.05, Mann Whitney test
Fig 3ROC curve for cervical length as a predictor of preterm birth at 18 to 22 weeks’ gestation.
Fig 4ROC curve for cervical length as a predictor of preterm birth at 28 to 32 weeks’ gestation.